SIMBAD references

2021ApJ...908...14K - Astrophys. J., 908, 14-14 (2021/February-2)

Origin of Galactic spurs: new insight from radio/X-Ray all-sky maps.

KATAOKA J., YAMAMOTO M., NAKAMURA Y., ITO S., SOFUE Y., INOUE Y., NAKAMORI T. and TOTANI T.

Abstract (from CDS):

In this study, we analyze giant Galactic spurs seen in both radio and X-ray all-sky maps to reveal their origins. We discuss two types of giant spurs: one is the brightest diffuse emission near the map's center, which is likely to be related to Fermi bubbles (NPSs/SPSs, north/south polar spurs, respectively), and the other is weaker spurs that coincide positionally with local spiral arms in our Galaxy (LAS, Local Arm spur). Our analysis finds that the X-ray emissions, not only from the NPS but also from the SPS, are closer to the Galactic center by ∼5° compared with the corresponding radio emission. Furthermore, larger offsets of 10°-20° are observed in the LASs; however, they are attributed to different physical origins. Moreover, the temperature of the X-ray emission is kT ≃ 0.2 keV for the LAS, which is systematically lower than those of the NPS and SPS (kT ≃ 0.3 keV) but consistent with the typical temperature of Galactic halo gas. We argue that the radio/X-ray offset and the slightly higher temperature of the NPS/SPS X-ray gas are due to the shock compression/heating of halo gas during a significant Galactic explosion in the past, whereas the enhanced X-ray emission from the LAS may be due to the weak condensation of halo gas in the arm potential or star formation activity without shock heating.

Abstract Copyright: © 2021. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

Journal keyword(s): X-ray astronomy - Interstellar medium - Radio astronomy - Superbubbles - Spiral arms

Simbad objects: 10

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